PCGameBenchmarks

Can GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER run Dying Light?

Great

The GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER handles Dying Light well at 1080p, delivering approximately 330 FPS at High settings — above the 60 FPS target for smooth gameplay. It can also achieve smooth 1440p at around 247 FPS.

Dying LightGeForce GTX 1660 SUPER FPS Data

Quality1080p1440p4K
Low515 fps386 fps206 fps
Medium412 fps309 fps165 fps
High330 fps247 fps132 fps
Ultra268 fps201 fps107 fps

Estimated FPS · actual performance may vary based on drivers and settings

Minimum System Requirements

CPU
Intel Core i5-2500 3.3 GHz
GPU
Nvidia GeForce GTX 560
RAM
4 GB

Genres

ActionRole-playing (RPG)

About

Dying Light (2015) is a first-person action survival horror game set in a sprawling open world filled with the infected. The game innovatively splits gameplay into day and night cycles—during daylight you scavenge for supplies and craft weapons, but when darkness falls, the infected become far more aggressive and dangerous, forcing you to survive against overwhelming odds. This day-night dynamic, combined with parkour movement and melee combat, made it stand out in the action RPG genre.

Dying Light runs well on modest hardware, making it accessible to most PC gamers. Entry-level GPUs with a benchmark score around 1847 meet minimum requirements, while a CPU score of approximately 2929 ensures smooth gameplay. For solid FPS performance at higher graphics settings, a mid-range GPU performs excellently, and the game scales well across different hardware tiers. Whether you're chasing 60 FPS at 1080p or pushing higher resolutions, Dying Light's performance is generally forgiving and won't demand top-tier components.

With an 80/100 rating, Dying Light delivers compelling survival horror gameplay with excellent value. If you enjoy action RPGs with tense atmospheres and the night-time dread factor, this is absolutely worth playing.

More Dying Light GPU benchmarks

Can GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER Run Dying Light? — 330 FPS at 1080p | PCGameBenchmarks